I've read lots of the posts in this forum, and I see many more that reflect anger, frustration and resentment than I do that reflect the satisfaction of taking care of others. For those who've been caregivers for a while - if you could go back in time, had the financial ability to put your loved one(s) in an appropriate facility, and live your life without the burden of caregiving, would you do it? Complicated question, I know, but thank you.
first of all after my dad had his ... massive ... stroke i had my mother live in independent living till she died. He lived in a skilled nursing facility till he died.
i did not ask her to live with us since my husband and i both worked and why should she live by herself day after day with no one to talk to ?
she considered it jail even tho her meals were fixed and apartment cleaned and van rides and bingo were available. But then im sure that without my dad that anyplace no matter how luxurious it was it would still be a jail.
Ive had long term insurance for my husband and myself for about 20-25 years now. The cost of it goes up every year but the coverage unfortunately remains the same since i just cant afford higher premiums anymore. i work parttime to pay for it since social security will not cover all the payments. But im hoping that with the insurance and savings we’ll still be able to afford a nice facility.
my husband is adamantly disinterested in ever going while im hoping that i can enjoy the amenities while im still able.
that is the part i hope im not wrong about ... that im not wrong about the facilities’ standards and im still healthy enough to enjoy them.
take your mother to visit a few facilities to look them over and see what they provide. Keep in mind tho that you’ll never know what theyre truly like till she moves in.
ive found several ... both skilled and assisted living.
im in my early 80s and still healthy and wouldnt be accepted in either yet but strangely as ive said im looking forward to a good ending to my life at a nice place.
Your loved one will suffer daily neglect in every facility, including hospitals.
Everyone who posts here has their very own set of circumstances unique to their experience and relationships.
Here’s what you might consider, based on my experience: think with your heart.
Hire in-home help before putting your Mom in a facility.
Later, you may find, as I do, that the weight of grief is lessened by the guilt and
regrets you don’t have.
My amazing Mom was the most unconditionally loving, giving, hardworking, and
inspiring person I have ever known.
Everyone loved her, and people would often use the same words to describe her: "your Mom is such a sweetheart"
The two of us were a team all my life through challenges, rewards, and simply enjoying life. She put the needs of everyone she loved ahead of herself.
Mom never asked to not be put in a facility. In fact, she suggested moving in to one so as not to be a burden or impose on me.
Instead, I frequently volunteered that as long as I was alive, she would never be put in a facility.
The cost of hiring in-home help privately, not through an agency, can be very similar to the basic monthly cost of living in a facility.
During one of our daily walks, Mom and I would see a woman conducting a senior class at a nearby fitness club. We were able to meet her one day and learned that she was a home personal fitness trainer in addition to working for the club. Starting one day a week for an hour, eventually became five days a week. She shared Mom’s spirituality and faith. What a home run!
For me, people sent by agencies were unsatisfactory, and expensive. So, I got online and joined Care.com to read postings from caregivers looking for clients. Pay attention to the way the caregivers communicate and spell in their postings. Clear, understandable communication, and the ability to write down information that can be read and understood, is important, especially in an emergency.
I interviewed caregiver candidates at a local café, before or after lunch, over coffee or tea. This is inexpensive and a great opportunity for you and the candidate caregiver to ask and answer questions, and avoids giving out home address information to someone you haven’t met in person first.
If you aren’t comfortable with the idea of interviewing people, it’s likely you have a confident, outgoing friend or family member who could join you and help with the interview.
There are many CNA’s working in short-handed facilities, caring for up to 60 patients per shift, who would much prefer to give full and undivided attention to one person. They are out there. Try!
In addition to full ADA safety equipment installed by professionals in the bathroom and shower, the safety protocols I developed, that all of us followed, resulted in Mom never falling. The extent and level of our care exceeded that of a Skilled Nursing Facility. No, it wasn’t easy. But what we all accomplished together: Mom, the caregivers, the personal trainer, and me, was very satisfying.
Thankfully, Mom's life was far from being the equivalent of a neglected potted plant in a short-handed facility with constant turnover, wearing soiled briefs for hours, with the television blaring and the call button ignored. It took effort, and not everyone we hired worked out in the long run. But over time, it worked well and kept Mom’s life safe, interesting, connected, and enjoyable.
Like everything we do, by putting in the effort and working on it, we’ll get better at what we take on.
I would gladly do it all again.
Mom won the last hand of progressive rummy we played, and offered me these comforting words as her life was drawing to a close: “I will always live in your heart”
With candles flickering, and classical music softly playing, Mom died at home as I held her hand.
I am so lucky, and will always be grateful, to be her son.
Op did mention "90 y.o. mother" but nothing else. Sounds made up to me.
i agree polarbear.
no one with a real 90 year-old mother says nothing.
with a 90 year-old mother, you as an adult child (OP) have lottttts of experience you want to share, help others to get through the challenges.
At the end of last month, my mother fell and her health began to rapidly decline. I asked to move her to assisted living, but that takes time and no other assistance was offered. So with no part-time care-givers to help. I was expected to care for her. They gave me a list of agencies I could call for help -- we were only allowed to use certified people otherwise we had to go through FBI check etc. -- but none worked out. So, there we were, paying over $4,000/month and I was doing 5-6 hours of care-giving a day. Finally, when it became apparent that my mother's decline was so great that even assisted living wouldn't work and they would have probably placed her in skilled nursing, I opted to bring her home. Due to COVID, all skilled nursing patients are isolated. If a patient is already there, fine, but to move my mother into isolation seemed a bit cruel to me, even bordering on elder abuse.
So I opted to enroll her in hospice and bring her home. She is in a hospital bed in our family room and is more alert than she was at the facility where she was basically sleeping. I did neglect to consult the contract that my parents signed regarding leaving the facility, so we have some negotiating to do with the exec director. But I'm much more relaxed now that I can be in charge of her care.
i wish everything good for you, and for your mother!!
:)
Knowing all that, we would have moved her into memory care, but hindsight is 20/20 right? We were not operating with all the facts.
oh my goodness, how sweet of you, to go so far, as to lie about that, just to be able to help her.
"She still will not believe I did not need to give up my life and move in with her"
that's really too bad, and really incredibly kind of you to have lied like that to help her.
"but at least she is now realizing she is glad I am there to help. (as her personal slave some days!)"
i wish you everything good!! and hope you find good solutions onwards!!
I suppose if I were single, older and lonely, the thought of taking on the care of my mother might appeal to me on some level. I am none of those things and do not regret for one minute finding a lovely assisted living facility nearby for mom to live in. Fast forward 8 years and we have recently moved her into memory care where she is quickly running out of money. The next move will be to a nursing home and me managing a Millers Trust. It is exhausting and I'm just managing her care and finances...can't imagine caring for her full time.
It saddens me that as the end of our lives approach, it turns into nothing but a struggle to find somewhere to put us, to manage the money or lack there of and the family members who have to swallow the guilt of not having the time and patience to spend with elderly.
My fingers are crossed that I drop dead at a ripe old age after living independently so that my daughter doesn't have to deal with any of it! That is the lottery I want to win.
just consign her to a terrible nursing home and then “run and play.” I have a very small family. I know I have limits, but if you can’t have your family what is the point of living?
I’m not sure I want to “run and play” at this point.
she was falling and soiling herself and refused to see it as time to go to one.
she used other's time and nothing was good enough for her.
i think it has to do with the elderly person's attitude , most burn out is from ungrateful parents or they get to the point of dementia and physical incapacity. We are mere people not trained medical personel and we are one person, not a team of health professionals. I believe one caregiver for a person who is medically and physically limited should not be encouraged.
In my case, if Covid wasn't around and money was no issue, I would've put my mom in the nursing home until she could walk again.
I'm the reason she isn't in the nursing home, but if the caregiving woes continue to drag on, I might be the reason she's in the nursing home.